{"title":"How to Make Resin Keychains (Beginner Mod Podge Resin)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/resin-art/how-to-make-resin-keychains","category":{"slug":"resin-art","name":"Resin Art"},"creator":{"name":"Plaid Crafts","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtrdEiQnaRrmseXgggjt3Dw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TmwP1I_8oGg"},"tldr":"Make resin keychains at home with two-part epoxy resin and silicone molds. Mix, embed glitter or beads, pour, torch out bubbles, cure 24 hours.","totalDurationSeconds":1105,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Butane torch (or lighter)","Smooth-walled milliliter measuring cups","Silicone keychain mold","Popsicle sticks and toothpicks","Foam brush","Nitrile gloves","Respirator mask","Small kitchen timer"],"materials":["Mod Podge Resin (2-part kit, 8 oz or 16 oz)","Glitter, dried flowers, alphabet beads, or other embeds","Keychain hardware (rings, jump rings, lobster clasps)","Plastic wrap or wax paper for work surface"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Set Up Your Workspace and Lay Out Supplies","text":"Cover your work surface with plastic wrap, wax paper, or a tile - resin drips are nearly impossible to clean off raw counters. Put on nitrile gloves and a respirator before opening the bottles. The cured resin is harmless, but the uncured stage is what you want to keep off your skin and out of your lungs.Lay out everything you'll need: the two-part resin kit, smooth-walled milliliter cups, popsicle sticks for stirring, toothpicks for nudging glitter, butane torch, foam brush, baby wipes for cleanup, and your silicone keychain mold."},{"number":2,"title":"Measure Equal Parts Resin and Hardener","text":"Two-part resin needs equal volumes of part 1 (resin) and part 2 (hardener). Measure each separately into smooth-walled plastic milliliter cups. Kathy uses 15 ml of each - small batches go further than you'd think because resin keychains use very little.Don't use wax-lined paper cups - the wax dissolves into the resin and ruins the cure. Smooth plastic measuring cups work and are reusable if you wipe them clean before the resin sets."},{"number":3,"title":"Combine and Stir Gently for 3 Minutes","text":"Pour both parts into one fresh smooth-walled cup. Scrape every drop off the original cups - leftover unmixed parts cause sticky spots in the cure.Stir gently for a full three minutes. Watch your stirring direction and don't whip air into the mixture. The combined resin will look milky and cloudy at first - that's normal. Keep stirring until it goes clear. Scrape down the sides and bottom every minute so all of the resin gets fully mixed."},{"number":4,"title":"Torch the Bubbles and Add Glitter","text":"Pass a butane torch over the surface of the mixed resin briefly - just a quick zap is enough to pop the air bubbles trapped during stirring. Set the torch on its lowest setting; you don't want to scorch the resin.Stir in your glitter, gems, dried flowers, or alphabet beads. Don't stir too aggressively - that adds new bubbles. Just fold them in gently. The amount of glitter is taste; more for full coverage, less for a hint of sparkle."},{"number":5,"title":"Pour Into the Silicone Mold","text":"Pour the glittered resin slowly into the silicone keychain mold. Stay just below the fill line marked on the mold - if you go over, the keychain will have a thick back lip you'll have to sand off later.Use a toothpick to push glitter or embeds into the corners of the design and to free any trapped bubbles. The glitter naturally floats and shifts as the resin starts to set, so position pieces a couple of times during the first ten minutes."},{"number":6,"title":"Torch Again and Cure for 24 Hours","text":"Pass the torch over the filled mold one more time to pop new bubbles that rose during pouring. Sometimes a second pass is needed a few minutes later as more bubbles surface.Move the mold to a flat, dust-free space and leave it for a full 24 hours. Don't tilt or move it during the cure - any disturbance leaves marks in the surface. Once cured, flex the silicone gently to pop the keychain out, then drill or thread the keychain hardware through the molded loop."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-20T13:34:59.757Z","published":"2026-05-06T16:27:27.346Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}